Gleaner_19830506

VOL. 58 NO. 22 0 MAY 6, 1983
Nelson Named New Coach
Nazareth Public Relations Release
8ill Nelson. mBn·s varsity baSlletball
coach at Rochester Institute of
Technology. has been named men·s
\/arslty basketball coach at Nazarelh
College. Nazareth Athlellc Director 8111
Carey announced Ihe appointmsntto·
day (April 25),
Carsy also announced that Jim
Emery. Jr .. has been retained as assis­IDnl
men's I18rsity basketball coach.
Emery will coach the junior varsity
teem in addition to hiS dulles with Ihe
varsity.
The 39·year·old Nelson was named
Independent College Athletic Con.
ference Coach of the Year last winter
aher guiding RIT to its firsl ICAC hlle -
trying IIhaca with a I ()'2 league mark.
Ithaca edged ths Tlg al s by 8 single
point In a playoff to gain the ICAC·s
automaUc bid to NCAA post·seasons
loruney play, RIT was 15·11 overall
last year and 4()'36 during Nelson·s
three seasons as head coach. His
198 t -82 team won the Lincoln First
Bank Tournament. '
·'We are very fortvnate 10 have a
-coach wilh the Quality and experience
that Bill nelson has Joining our SIDH. "
Carey said. ··He is a proven winner and
will do much to continue building the
tradition of excellence the Nazareth
basketball program has enjoyed in its
iniiial years.·'
··We are also very pleased to have
Jim Emery rem~l!l as part 01 our
leam." Carey added. '·Jlm is an ex·
lremely dedicated, hardworking coach
who hes done en outstanding job tor us
during the past year."
Net son succeeds John Betleln. who
resigned at Nazarelh three weeks ago
10 move to leMoyne, Nazareth posled
Frank Horton
a 20-6 record - Its most wins In a
single season - dunng Belleln's tone
season as head coach.
Nelson will also coach
men's-womsn's CrOSS country and
teach physical education classes al
Nazarelh.
He has been a part Of Ihe RIT basket·
ball program lor the past 15 years.
Before becoming head coach, Nelson
served for 12 years as assislant coach
under Sill Carey. who was Ril's head
coach until he came 10 Nazareth In
, 980, Nelson also coached soccer al
RIT for eight years befors laking over
the head baske-tball pOst.
Nalson coached at Griffiths Instirutes
In Springville end at Bishop Kearney
High School before jOining RIT.
He played basketball for Greace
Olympia High School and Brockport,
serving as a tean;> captain at both his
high school and college teams,
Nelson holds a bachelor·s degree in
physical education from Brockport and
a mestsr's degree In physical educa·
tion from the Unlvers'ty of Oregon.
Nelson and his wife Margaret are
parents ot a 4 and a hall·year·otd
daughter. Laura BrOOke,
The 25·year-old Emery served as an
assistant ooach at Nazarelh under
Beilein las! wimer. Belore coming to
Nazareth. Emery was assistant basket·
ball coach at Alfred University lor fwo
years and s",lie, served l ilree years on
Ihe llhaca College basketball coaching
slaff. ,
Emery holds a bachelor's degree on
phySical education flom Ithaca Col·
lege. His wile. M~ry Ann, Is associate
direclor of residenhallife at Nazarelh.
Pentagon Purchasing: Less For Your $ $
Washington-Whst would you think of
someone who purchases an Item lor
$2.000 at one slore. which he could
have purcl1ased al a store across Ihe
street for only $6477 Not very sensible
woufd be an understatement.
Nonetheless, this IS precisely whaltho
Defense Department IS actually doing
in ils procurement 01 some $t 3 billion
worth of spare pans used 10 keep our
mifitary machines working.
The above is but one among hun·
dreds of examples brought to myalten·
Mn during a recent hearing before my
Govemment Operahon Committee on
Oepartment of Defense procurement
practices.
The roosan for this problem Is slm·
pie: Defense does not insist Ihal con·
tractors compete with each other for
military spare parts business, This fact
was subslanliated by belh the General
Accounting OHice and the Acting In­spector
General for the Oepartmenl 01
Defense.
Existing practice is to accept prime
contractors as the " whole source" lor
items manufactured under subcon­tract.
The result is that taxpayers end
up paying for bolh Ihe subconlracted
pan and markups imposed by the
prime contractor. These mar1<ups are
high in some cases, they exceed (Wice
the price Of the part IIself!
To be sure, there are a number of
compleXities Involved in Defense pro·
curement of military weapons and
parts, In many ways, ,{ is easier for Ihe
Penlagon to rely on prime contractors
lor spare pans. Nonetheless, entangl.
tng bureaucratic procedures and
language alB no reason for wasteful
expenditure of Federal dollars. I made
Ihls point, in the strongesttenns. at Ihe
hearing. A top·leval deciSion must be
made within Ihe Pentagon to conlfact
out mare of the spare parts business.
Without such a 'deCision at thiS levef, I
do not believe contractlng out of spare
pans will be accomplished to the ex·
tant pOSSible. And wilhout this contrao­lOng
out. Ihe conservat,vely estimated
$4 billion that could be saved annually
would nOI be realized.
Wher'13 spare parts have been com­pe~
livety procured, unU costs have
dropped dramatically. For example. a
baH Ie used on the Prall S Whitney
TI"·30 engine on the F·I I 1 atrplence
costs $3,577 each when purchased
from Pratt 8. Whitney under the sale·
source prime contractor system, In a
subseQuent competitive procurement.
ths part was aCQuired lrom a Ihird party
vendor, Atamo Allcrafl Supply, for a
new price of $1,'27-11 savings of
$2.4 50 each I
A seal used In Ine engines lor the
B-52H, 0-141 and E·3A aircraft was
originally purchased from Ihe prome
contractor <prsn 8. Whilney), which
was nol the actual manufacturer The
cosl was $2,000 per part. Two years
latsr. after Ihe lime had been selected
Conl/nued on page 3
NAZARETH COLLEGE OF ROCHESTER
Student in the News:
Thomas Warfield
by Tom Oelpha
Thomas Warfield, a studenl at
Nazarelh, Is a lalentBd young anisl.
whose only cream is 10 be able to per·
form forever, Performing is something
Ihat he has been doing most of his lile,
At age four, TomslarteOstudylng IhB
plano, and at age live he starred in his
lirst play enlllled, LIN/e Black Now. He
attended grammar school al The World
of Inquiry, whiCh' Tom explains ;s a
school of free Ihln~''1g . In the fiflh
grade he wrote a play enlitled, The
Story of Daniel Hale WiJliams, a famous
black surgeon. Tom played the lead,
At age eleven he was an ambllious
young man who knew where his hfe
was going. He took his firs I ballet
lessons with Olive McQue, olle of Ihe
linest ballet teachers in the country, By
Ihe addition 01 danCing Thomas War·
field was building himself a sotid loun·
dation in Ihe pertorming al1S , and mov­ing
toward becoming a comptete per·
larmer,
At thiS early stage in his life people
ware already starting to Iske notice of
him, Later thai year. he slarled training
hiS lIOice. He was a member 01 the
Eastman Children 's Choir, Bnd he later
went on 10 work with Ihe Opera Thealer
of Rochester. AI Easl High. Tom $pent
four years devetoping his Iheatrical
skills. He had nlany roles in plays like,
The Me Nobody Knows, and Raison In
The Sun, He elso had Ihe opportunity
10 direct and produce plays there.
Alter a successlul audilion with Ihe
Nazar~h thealer department. Tom
decided 10 aMend Nazareth 10 enhance
his theatrical skills. Tom went to New
York City after his freshman year
at Nazareth, While illere, he joined the
Joeffrey II ballel company, He was de­ing
Quile well with Ihe company when a
leg injury lorced him to stop dancing.
To occupy his lime while realVering.
he audllioned (or Ihe New York Cily
Opera. He was good enough to work In
two operas. which featured Ihe famous
Beverly Sills" While in NYC Tom
became closa fnends with director
Franco ZeHerelii. Tom says that this
man had a big "npact on his life. and he
oHered inSight aM triendship to a
scared. young pertormar on his own. It
was Franco who persuaded Tom to go
back 10 schoot to lindaul what he really
wanled in liIe,
The perwn who has made the big·
gesl tmpaci on Tom is his Aunl. Ihe
famous Leontyen Price. She's been
awarded twenty·two Grammys and
also Ihe prestigeous award for voice of
the century. Tom looks up 10 his Aunt
wuh pride and admilation, He hopes 10
follow in her loolsleps, and experience
the sensation tha1 she feels when she
Is on stage, performing belors many
people.
Tom feels Ihal "God gives us the
chance. II's not what you have to do,
11'5 what you do," As long as Tom Is
performing he'll be happy. While at
Nazareth Tom has come In conIDct
with many fine Instructors. He has
special praise lor \Wo people In par·
IIcular. whose guidartce has helped
him develop tenfOld . Frederick
O'Brsdy has helped him In the
theater and Francesca Guti. an English
teacher of hiS. has taught hom
much aboullife. It was Francesca who
helped Tom develop hiS writing talent
and she entered two 01 his recenUy
wrinen poems In a National Pastry
Contest, They both won honorabfe
mentIon acclaim among American Col·
leglate Poels His poems will be
pulJhshed.
Thomas Warfield, actIng. dancing.
Singing or wriling: these skills make up
the artist and the man. Tom is a
dynamic performer who captivales his
audience, Where ever his talents may
take him is anyone'sgu8S$. bul as long
as he Is p5r1orming, he will always be
happy
EDITORIAL
PAGE
rhe Last Word
After eighl monlhs of working lor the
Gleaner. I've decided Ihal Ihis is my
lasl semesler BS the editor. Uke many
olher S1udents. I have 10 work part-lime
to meet my own financial respon·
sibllilies. My academic pertormece has
declined this stlmester as a result of my
overburdended schedule. So iI's lime
10 pass Ihe editorship to a Irusted
associate. Tamare Kirch.
Tamara joined the Gleaner Ihis spr­ing.
She rapidly progressed In respon·
sibility lrom staN writer 10 feeture editor'
10 co-edllor of Ihe Gleaner. She par­Hcipaled
In the Washinglon sludent
lobby eHort Ihis year. Or. McCam­bridge.
Ihe advisor 10 the Siudent lobby
(I.S.C.!. found her 10 be quick al grasp­Ing
the issues of studenl aid legislation.
I found her 10 be a hard-working part­ner
who could be depended on under
pressure. She' s 18ki ng on what I've
found to be a very difficult job.
I want 10 thanll the many people
who've participaled in Itle production
oltha paperthis year. Mary Me/iro did a
greal job as business manager. Guy
Nlca/ucd wrole a variety 01 copy for us
- and much 01 It under last minute
pressure. Thanks to all the regular
fealure wrilero; Marc Lli Vecchla and
Art SmIth provided valuable ex­perience
and advice to many of the
Gleaner's staff during Ihe mid·
semesler change in editors - thanks
guys. Thanks also to Kathy Hughes.
Gil Condit. and Jennie Mosher lor all
the last minule phOIOS and graphics.
Thanks 10 Ihe active support of faulty
and administration people who were
not only able to continue productlon ot
Ihe Gleaner but their adVice improved it
considerably .
Thanlls lor your support: Or. Mc­Cambridge,
Dr. Wooley. Jim Graham.
Roger ,Smith. Alec SUlheriand. Or.
JoYce. Rocco Maddalina, Greg Evans.
Sister Theresa Daniets. Mary H everon­Smith,
and Jim Erikson.
Special Ihanks to President Kldera:
his advice and personel Interesl were
deeply appreciated.
And finally - thanks to all our
readers. We appreciate all your letters
and suggestions. Good luck on your
exams and have a great summer.
Dear Edllor;
Ted Kmiecik
Editor-In Chief
Your use 01 yellow journalism
humors me. Perhaps you would like to
use some yellow dye 10 give your
paper the corn~c\ eNect. I do nOI know
where you got Ihe $5000. figure tor
the movies in the Art Center. maybe
from your magiC bag of tricks?
Nazareth college sludents are suf­fering
from a large dose of' apathy. It
seems all thai anyone can do is com­plein.
The students sni using the
Undergrad Assoclallon as Iheir
scapegoat. The students heve no Idea
what problems the chairpersons of the
-v- nazgreth
clubs are up againS1. Social Board Is e
prime example. Alcohol awareness is
a growing concern on campus. They
suggested Ihat Class Day \ee-shlrts
should not have a beer can on them as
this may promole NEIZIlreth studenls
fo drink. Alcohol awareness also sug·
3-week session May I 6 - June 4 undergraduate classes only
Reglslrallon going on now.
6 -week session June 27 - Aug. 5 Undergraduate and
graduate classes
RegiSter June 13 - June 24 : lale registration June 27 - July I .
1 -week session August 8 - 12 Graduate classes only
Regis.er June 13· July 22.
Call 586-2525. eX1. 400. lor registration and course informatlon.
gested Ihal a quaner oe cnargeo lor
every beer. 10 cut down on drinking.
Cultural Affairs (nol Cultural AI;.
,'villas) has been hurt by Ihe unln­vofvemenl
01 Ihe student body.
Everyone comes up with "great
Ideas" but when It comes lime to pul
the ideas IOgether. everyone has
" somethIng else to do." Since
Saplember. movies have been shown
in Ihe pub. It seems as " Ihe sttldenls
will only ahow up /I Ihere is a beer
speclal. .. ls beer cultural? Must It be a
mOlivating faClor lor involvement?
Over a month ego. I wrote a letter 10
the Gleaner. and asked tor some sug·
gestions. Does anyone have any idea
on the number of responses that I
received? You guessed right_ oone.
Improvements have been made in
Ihe Cabaret room. With Ihe help 01
Greg Evans. a new screen was pur'
chased. A new lens was also bought
10 make Ihe picture bigger. Does
allyone ever say " thanks" or " good
iob?"
I have another question for you, Mr.
Kmiecik. Culturat AI/airs has to pay for
its ads In the Gleaner. This Is similar 10
double laxation. The students are pay­Ing
money so Ihey know what is going
on on campus. The problem is. the
students are already paying lor the
newspaper. My $5000. question Is.
how come Ihe Pub does nOI have to
pay for its ads in the Gleaner! Did the
people who ara running in the eleo­tions
pay forthelr ads? If Ihey did nOI.
why not? I am representing a large
group 01 sludents, yet I had to pay.
Now it Is Ume for Cultural Atlairs to
gel some tree advertiSing. On Tues­day.
April 26. Cultuml Affairs Is
presenting a post-Class Day celebra­lion.
In Ihe Cabaret room. It stsrts at
t :00 with " Crazy RiCk" on accuslic
guitar. From one 10 five. Duncan
Cl1IwtorO and Pat Seaman will do
carlcalures·free 01 OOSI. At 3:30 pm.
"Bart Dentino" will also play acoustic
gullar. (you have seen him at Ihe
tracks) During this time. the pub will
have soda and full Oar specialS. Free
poslers will also be given away. Ad­m
Issioo Is free. a nd a II are wetcome.
Yours in culture.
Marlha Grinstead
Chairperson of Cultural ANails
Ed',torial
Response 10 Me.rtha Gri nstead
Sour grapes?
Come into Ihe ottice end I'll be glad
to explain our policY on advertising in
detail. Your requeS1 for II publiC nOlice
was IOOlaletorun. And our lree ads lor
the Pu b ere for the same purpose as
your Cabarel improvements. Both of
our clubs want to benefil the studeots
and hefp Ihe Pub 10 get back into Ihe
blacK Your arudent advisor Greg
Evans Is Itle source lor Ihe ligures on
your club's expenditures.
\ hope thatlhe Nazareth Public Aela·
lIons!)epartmenl wasn', offended your
personal remarks (yellow journalism.
elc'). The P.R. stall has been formally
Cfitiquing Itle Gleaner eaCh issue sinoo
October. Their combined joumallstic
.experience exceeds (wenty five years.
They have worked hard to show us how
to improve the paper. They gave us
high marks. You're II tough audience.
Mel1ha.
Letters to the Editor
Dirty words, t-shirts
and the Alcohol
Awareness Committee
I would like 10 lake a moment end ex·
press my thoughlS On some of the
Ihlngs thai have been happening
around Nazarelh of lale. There IS a ter.
rible thing going around. Have you
heard about II? lI 's a very dirty four 1Er!'
ler word, thaI's right BEER Oh, how I
shudder at the Ihought. Every body
has warned me about it, The office of
Residemial life and especially the
Alcohol Awareness committee. "Slay
away from those Beer specials " , and
heaven forbid we have a beer mug on
the class-day tee shirts. fHow did
Ihooe shirts sell by the way? Does thai
teli you anything,)
Come on folks wake· up and smalilhe
coffee. Seer Is a fact 01 life. Let's not
act like a bunCh of Jert)l Fallwell drop
ouls. Every day we are confronled wilh
alcohol. Let's deal w~h "like adults in,
stead 01 sweeping it under the carpel.
To drink or not to drink is a very impor·
tant quesUon. The less we know aboul
it. the more dangerous a Question It
becomes.
College students Ihroughoul Ihe
country drink. That Is a lactl Whal do
you think we did In DaytOna Beach?
Read the residential life handbook? It
seems 10 me Ihst the olflce 01 residen·
tial life, and Ihe alchohol awarnness
committee could help Ihe sludents
mue!> more eHectivly II Ihey got down
oH their big white horses a~d com·
municated with the studenls on a Dna
to one. Get 10 know Ihe 31udenlB: you
already know how to e)(plOit them. Of·
fer oounoelling lor Ihose who need it.
act like you care for 8 change. t don't
Ihlnk I 'm wrong. il you daub! me look at
Ihe " on campus" enrollment figures
fOI next year. Good Job guys. Nobody
wanls 10 hve On campus anymore,
wonder why? II you think il's because
of nalionwide enrollment decreases,
Iryagain: theU 01 Rand RIT can't build
their student housing lasl enough to
Bcoomodate the demand.
Signed
Sa~dy Becker' ·N·14"
Student response to Bellinger
and Grinstead leiters ...
Dear Mr. Edi!or.
Over the past two and three weekS. I
have seen many ludicrous and
premalure responses 10 Ihe Gleaner's
allemp!lo inform Ihe students 01 exact·
Iy what is and has been going on within
Ihe sludenl (for Ihe lack of a bet1er
word) govemment. !!hink il Is lime Ihal
an oUlsider, if I may be so bOld, said a
word or two.
Firsl. I would like to addrnss Mr. Beli·
Inger's lel1er. Wait. He and I are
friends. He won'! mind if I call him
" Sam". I can not beliave Ihat you said
that the Gleaner was aUotted $1 I ,000
Ihls year. ,Iue, it was given additional
fundS Ihree·quarters 01 the way
Ihrough this school year and, true. II
does add up 10 appro)(Jmately that
ligure. Bul If t am not wrong, Ihe
newspapel waS originally allolted only
$8500 for this year. After I spenl hall
........· •A••••- ~ ....... .
: (Campus Paperback Bestsellers} :
• I. The n",m Blnls, by Coleen Me Cullough. lAvon. $3.95.) •
• HlSlorical AUSlrnlian ramlly saga. •
• 2. War and Remombranc&. by Herman Wouk (Pocke' $5.95.1 •
• ConlinulnQ 'Me slory began in "The Wind, 01 War". •
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Sptes and oounter!p~e:s race \0 prevent World \'I/a, m.
• 4. The Wind. 01 War, by Herman Wouk IPoc~.1. S4 95.) •
• One family' srruggle 10 .urviva dUM9 World W;,r II •
• 5. Garfield his hIs Heart Ou~ by Jim Oov, .. (Ballanll~a. •
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• 6. 5<>phle'. Choice, by William Slyron. (B.nlam. S3.95) Tlw •
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•
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: ( New 6, Recommended==J :
• The One Tree: The second chronicles 01 Thomas Covenanl, •
Book II, by Stephen R Donaldson (Ballantine. SJ 50 1
• Long-awaiteCl sequel 10 The Wounded Land. •
• Trealing and Overcoming Anore~ia Nervosa, •
• by Sleven lellenkron. (Warner. $350.) A psychO-lnerapIS! •
and recognizeCl expen on anorexIa nervosa, reveals a new.
• proven Inerapy lor Ihis serious Cllsease. •
• Physics liS Metaphor" by Rogsr S. Jones (Meridian. S7.50.) •
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Edilol-In-<:hiel ... .. ... . . ..... ..... ... , . . . . ... Ted Kmiecik
News Editor ...... . . . , .. .. . •. . . .. ,. . ,. . .. Guy Nioolucei
Features Editor . . . . , . . .. . . .... , , .. . . . . .. .... . Tamara Kirch
Sports Editor . . . . . . . . ... . ...... . . . .. .
Ar1S Genter .. . . . .. .. ... . .. ... . ... .... . . .... Clare Donnelly
Cartoon isiS ... ... Cathy Carfagna, Duncan Crew/ord, Michael Amory
Graph,cs. . . . . . . . . . . Gillian Conde, Jennie Mosher
Layout Editor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. , . ... Kris Kirsch
Business Manager. , . . . ........ . .. Mary Melito
Advertis i ng. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mary Melito
Accounting. , . . . . . . . . . . '" .... . Jim Urwin
Steff . ... Guy Nicolucci, Thomas Oelpha, Ruth Conlber, Kathy KehOe
Pholo Editor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ....... Kathy Hughes
Photo Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ... David Beasley, Gillian Conde
an hour on my knees in lronl 01 Ihe
senate pleading lor more money, I was
only given an addllional $500. I believe
the senate wanted 10 give uS about
$1500more, bul you talked Ihemouiol
il. This is extremely inleresting con·
sidering Ihat when you were Involved
with the Gleaner, it wenl bankrupt.
That was Ihres years ago when you
were allolted $10,000. Remember,
when I was edilor, we only got $9000.
In three years. inllallon broughl Ihe
cost Of printing up over 20 percent.
And now I see Ihat the Gleaner is onlY
gelling $8000 for neJ<1 year I don'l
undersl1md. InOation goes up and the
Gleaner 's budget goBS down. Whal's
wrong? Oon'l you like newspapslS?
Nexl, you wrile thai the atudanls are
"nol happy" wilh Ihe paper. That 's an
Inlerest/ng accusation considering that
Ihe Gleaner receives nOlhing but let­lers
of compllmems. Just because
everyone Is unhappy with Ihe studenl
government doesn'l mean they are
unhappy wilh everyrhing. Don'l shifl
the failure 10 our backs when it belongs
on your OWn .
And one more Ihing. You accused
Ted of not being a .. good editor. " I
don'! believe the Gleaner has folded
under hiS leaderShip, has II?
Now 1\ is Ms. Gnnstead's lum
CullUfal Allalr,; is alloned Iheir funds
to entertain Ihe studenl body in a
Wasted S ... from page 1
lor competitive procurement. IhB price
had fallen 10 $474 each-a savings 01
over 76 percenl.
This situation is wasleful and ab­solutely
needless. There are small
business f,rms here in our area and in
other parts 01 Ihe counlry willing to
compete tor govemment work. These
firms can produce high.quallty part's al
a lower cost. And mBny of Ihem need
work lodey.
I Ihink the heanng before my Com·
culturally sound manner. She "com'
plalned" Ihal the students will only
" show up to the movie II Ihere Is a
beer speda!. " I Ihink your loability to
see students motives is exactly why
the ir is siudan! apathy towards Cull ural
Affair,;. illS not jus I Ihe beal special. II
is the ability 10 be abfe to walch a movie
and simullaneously smoke, eal. or
drink. And non-alcho~ollc beverages
are aVll,Iable. If I hi up a dgareHe in the
Arts Ce nter, I would be Ih rown au I 01
the room where the movie was being
shown. I can not bring food or
beverage inlO Iha room either. 11 you
wan! 10 show a movie, It is belter 10
show h in a movie Iheatre-type al·
mosphere. When I go to the Loew's
Theatre, I can have my popcom and
eat il 100. I can't in A·14 of the Arts
Center. This ability to ea1, drink, and
comfortably relax during a movia is
what anrac!s slUdenls, not beer
Specials alone. If you are worried about
what keeps students tram seeing your
movies. maybe you ought to take a bet·
ler look al whaf the siudents wanl 10
see and how they want to see il.
The rest ( wil) leave lor ·'Mr. Kmiecik, ,.
But I julrt want 10 mention that tor s0-
meone who complains aboul people
complaining, you sure complaIn alaI.
By Ihe W1Iy: thanks.
Marc La Vecchia
Former Edllor· The Gleaner
miltee slongly indicated to Ihe Pen·
lagon the unwillingness of Congress to
sland by and allow this "sole-source"
spare pana practice to continue. Fair
and open compelition is OUI best in­surance
that costs willstey under con·
trol and Ihat the armed services will
have Ihe equipment Ihey need. As
Ranking Minority Member 01 the
Governmenl Operalion CommlHee. I
will see that Ihe Pentagon moves
loward major improvements in the im·
portanl spare pans business.
The HARLEY
SALE
May 13 • 10 a,m. - 7 p.m.
May 14 • 10 a.m. - 5 p,m,
(Super Sale)
Spring &. Summer Clothing for
All, Furniture, Househo(d
Goods, Book &. Boutique Shops,
Antiques, Sporting Equipment
A Sale You Can " A"ord To IvI/SitI
The Harley School
1981 Colver St., Brighton
How To
SeA
Good
Camper
by Marc La Vecchla
My Driver Educallon teacher from
high school taught me a 101 aboul driv.
Ing: especially aboul driving cross­counlry.
I learned how to plan the
perleel roule and alternate driving w~h
friends, I learned whallo take with me,
like flares in case the car breaks down.
and a lot of money in case the car
breaks down. However. I would have
been more grateful if she had taken
one of thoses classes and Lalked about
camping once you reach your initial
destinallon.
I decided to play Mr, Economy and
save money this Spring Break by cam·
ping oul at Daytona Beach Instead of
getting a room In the holellike the 2000
other sludents In New Yorl< Stale. I
quickly learned that to camp out you
need more than a two-man pup tent,
A good friend of mine was camping
with me and thOught thai I had laken
care of all the camping necess~les. I
thought I had, too. The first Ihing I did
was "pitch" Ihe tenl.
That's cam per lalk.
As soon as the tent was pitChed. my
good friend reminded me Ihat il would
ha1/8 been better 10 put a canliBS
underneath in case It staned to rain.
"Wh'f/," t asked him.
"Because that is what all the good
campers do."
I remindad him that we were In
Florida and that It hadn', rainad there
tl- .~'II~ ~P;jllb "e" 100 .. ,._ .. __ .. :J ....... ___ _
.----.--..-~-
•
•• ••
since God told Noah to pilch an Ark. He
only told me that the "good camper"
takes these precautions.
The fourth night we went 10 sleep, I
slept with my head by the door of the
tenl. My good friend asked me why I
slept In thai posidon_ I kiddingly IOld
him that if a tornado decided to mistake
our tent for Kansas, thai I wanted to be
th 9 first to h It I he yellow briCk road. He
politely informed me that I was sleeping
in the wrong direction and that my feet
should face the tent door.
''Why?'' I asked him.
"Because that is what all the good
campers do."
By the fiflh night, my good friend
noticed something else about my cam­ping
techinques,
"Where is your sleeping bag?"'
"Ileft it at home,' 'I kindly answered,
"What have you been sleeping in all
week?'"
"The ten .. "
"'You didn't bring a sleeping bag?"
"Why should I? I have a blanket and
pillow, '" I assured him,
"'But all the good campers sleep In
sleeping bags. "
"Well, leI's hope Marlin Perkins isn't
watching us ...
By the sixth night, God decided to
pull a Quickie on Daytona Beach. He
dumped :1000 years of (ain on us, in
one night. It was then I unders!ood the
camper's philosophy. My feet got wet
_J ,. ...... ._. "_"_" ' - ........-......- f2EC,IP H;;rJr (5)
-.~ - .. ~-:~-+.---.-~ ~ .sIC-NATURE
}YIueft
to DO
Jt80Crr
·ltQrtt'~Q
(by mar'f la "~Q en ia
instead of my head. In short, I gal
pneumonia Instead of a weI·head. I'm
glad I was a "good camper."
The sel/8nth n ig h I brought mona rain
and my tornado. I just don't remember
anything In the Florida brochure that
showed 457 munchklns singing,
"Wake up, you sleepy head, Rubyour
eyes, gel out of bed. Lat them know,
the camper's tent is dead."
I suddenly had a great amount of
respect for Noah, I mean, I had lrouble
collectjng my thoughts in the middle of
the storm and he had 10 collect
animals.
At least he had a warning,
By Ihe middle of Ihe S9'Jenth night I
found my pillow being rapld Iy replaced
by B puddle,
"Quick," my good friend yelled,
"'Grab the plastic canvas out of the car
and throw ~ Ol/8r Ihe tent, That will
keep it from leaking."
"What plasuc canvas?"'
'"You didn't bring a plastic canvas In
case It rained?"
''Why shOuld I even think of bringing
a plastic canvBS with me? Wtry should I
even think it would rain in Florida?'"
"Because all good campers think of
these things,"
We slept in the car that night.
I loo~ alII ,lI]ls ~y.: ~1 , least the,Cjj.(
didn't break down.
God's Work
NeedsYouf
Urgent Chnstian ofg»nizallons are
suffering cnoc..>l peT>Onn.1 ,hono9"',
Thousand. of opening> need 10 be filled
n"'" All ~~ons. In the U.S and ove""""
Disc""..,.. opportu niMs Ihal ~ I you .
conte! c t Intercris1.o!
You'U receive a curreTll Itsl of openings
thaI require your skills and .''P''li''''c •.
God', IOOrk needs you,
Contact tnlercri5to today:
1(800)426-1342
(Alaska, Hawalt, Washtngton S1ate.
(206) 546-1330),
Or re:lurn the COUpOn l>e/o,,",
I-~-------------' m Intercrl810 CC:
, • The Christian I
~ ea"",r Sp.zdali<lS. I
PO. Box. 33487 I
Soattle, WA 98133 :
'd"'~lA~ t
Please send me ,n{onnaoon on nndlng I
"my pl~c:e" in God', work. t
Name I
Address __________ :
Ctry __________ I
L.. S_ia_M _________Zi_p ______ JI
1983 Trout And
Bass Stocking
The Monroe County Soil and Water
Conservallon District Is presenlly tak·
ing orders for Its spring trout stocking
and summer bass stocking programs.
Rainbow Troul fingerlings at 3-4 in·
ches for cold water ponds, and
Largemouth Bass fingerlings at I 1'>' In·
ches and Fathead Minnows for warm
water ponds" will be available. The
Rainbow Trout will be delivered May 2,
1983, at 10:00 and the Largemoulh
Bass and Fathead Minnows will be
delivered sometime In July, All
necessa ry forms for transportl ng and
stocking fish will be supplied with the
order torms. So, don't dalay, call our
office at473-2120 If you want to order
fish for stocking your ponds this year.
And more
Letters to
the ·Editor ...
Dear Ted,
Kudos for the greal Job you're doing
with Tile Gleaner,
Dear Gleaner Editor
(That's you, Ted),
Francesca Gull
How about putting one of your ace
reporters on the mystery of what has
happened to our Saturday mall
delivery? Ooce and for all, why are we
being deprived of il only because we
happen to live on Inslead of off cam­pus.
It's especially frustrating 10 Ihose
of us who arli expecting Important mail,
Why Is Ihls semester so different from
last semester when we did gel a Satur­day
mail delivery? It can '\ possibly be a
shortage Of help-I've talked to too
many of my fellow students who are not
working and would be more Ihan will·
ing to do anything to earn exira cash.
So, come on and give us back our mail
on Salurday.
A Resident
Feature
Acid Rain
A Serious Environmental Hazard
by Christine Pe11'I
Everyone knows thet ecid raln Is a
erlous worldwide enviromental
azard. especially In Ihe Adirondacks.
IUt whare does il oeme lrom? Who Is
eing effected by It? And how can it be
,revented?
The problem stems from vast Quan·
lies of coal. oil. and natural gas bel ng
'umed. Electrical generating plants.
ldustrial boilers. and smellers release
1to the air suiter dioxide and nKragen
O(ldes. the main contrlbutors to acid
aln. The United States alone
lischa~es 26 million tons of these
:ompounds a year. and Indiana. II­nois,
and Ohio are responsible for
Nenty-five percent of this amoun\.
There Is new evidsn08 that the emls·
,Ions Of automobiles Is another con·
ribuling faClor since many of the
Idirondack lakes affected are located
lear heavHy trafficked rOO05,
As the sulfer dioxide and
Iitrogenous oxides are released. they
iss into the atmosphere and begin to
:irculate with the moving air masses,
'!lese cherni08ls then Inlsract with the
:un. water. oxtdants, and other
:atalysts and change into Other forms
If sulfer and nitrogen: the forms pre­;
enl in acid precipiratlon.
Eventually Ihese chemicals are
:aughl in raJn droplets or snowflakes;
;Q In effect they are dilute solutions 01
'itrlc and sulfuric acid. The other way
hey exisl Is as dry particles and the
Irst rain or snowfall transforms them
nlo acid droplets,
Ons often hears about the add rain
lroblem in the AdlrondllCks. but this
lroblem exists in other portions of the
)nlled States. IISwsll asln Canada and
larts of Europe. Cities ara affected as
Nell as toresls, For example bridges.
1l8tues, monuments. and tombstones
are being decayed by Ihls preclpita·
tlon. Both Ihe U.S. Capitol and the
Statue at Ubeny ate famous examples
)f this.
Woodland and monuments aren't
!he only l/llngs affecled by acid raln:
:he health of the people Is at stake. The
1ry suWates are now being associated
Nith chronic bronchitis. asthma. and
lmphysema, In addition high odd con­enlS
in the waler aupply draws lead
Ind copper tram the piping and Into Ihe
lrlnklng water.
However. Ihe Adirondacks are very
;usceptible to add rain because the
nounl81nous region receives a lot of
lrecipllation and Ihe soli and bedrock
lte relarively thin. So the pH level
lound in the bedrock In whiCh the lakes
are formed I s not h Ig h enough to
neutralize this acid precipitation.
In the Adirondacks alone. 212 lakes
can no IOllller $upjJOrt fish life. AI a pH
level 016.5 (slighlly acidic) populations
of brook, brown. and rainbow Irout are
red ueed. As the addKy InCfease5 to a
pH of 5.5 lorge and smallmoulh bass
are eliminated and lhe trout and
salmon populations are further reduc·
ed. And finally at a pH of 5.0 taw fi6h
can survive at all.
In certain areas of the Adirondacks
fox. deer. rabbit. bobcaL racoon, and
porcupine populations are down
because of Ihe food Chain Interference
due to the acid precipitation. In addi·
«on. a New York State Forest Ranger
on Big Moose Lake notes that the loon
hes en~rely disappeared from the area.
Also. because of the high acidity.
bacteria and fungus that normally
cau sa decay a ra Inh ibited. Therefore
leaves that fall into acid lekes stay
there and eventually cause Ihese lakes
to fill in.
At present. the Cloon Air Act requires
each Industrial plant to control itS own
emissions. So In Ohio. a state with
looser regulations. the emissions are'
thirty ~mes greater than In "dean plant
states" such as Connecticut and other
New England States. This Act forces
slales thai do control their Industrial
output to stili suffer because ot the lax·
ness 8 nd recklessness 01 others.
In order to combat tile existing acid
In the lakes, lime or soda esh ere being
used to neutralize the water. Also,
strains of acid resistanl brook trout are
being d9118lopecf so tIlal the lakes will
again be fishable,
The acid precipItation problem will
continue 10 increase unless we ca Ie
e/lOugh to do something about h: such
as supPOning legls~tlon that will
reduce the emi ssion of lhasa lox Ins.
After all. who wants to see our
historical monuments crumbling
before our eyes. or walk Into a lifeless.
silent forest because its Inhabitants
have been driven away or killed
by ... ACIO RAIN.-?1<
····oORc~ G ~VLl S\
..... \it"' "'-~ ••.•
'J~ G ~!.=.".
~ .. "
Finger Lakes Music Festival
The 1983 Finger Lakes Music
Festival will mark the Rochester
Phllharmonic's seventh summer in
cana ndaigua and tt1e G ra nd 0 pening
ollhe long-awalred Finger Lakes Per·
forming Al1s Cenler, The perfo r·
mances of the 19B3 Finger Lakes
Music Festival will begin on July 16
and conlinue IhrQugh August 2B.
Rochester Philharmonic concerts
will be presented on Saturday and Sun.
day evenings at the Finger Lakes Per·
forminD Arts Cenler. which is located
on the campus of Ihe Community Col·
lege of me Finger Lakes. Saturday
evenings will soar wllh exhilirating
classical programs. while Sunday
evenings will sparkle with a variety of
festive pops conCBrts. All perfor­mances
begin al 7:30 p.m,
The Finger Lakes MUSiC FesliV81 0('
fers the sort of exciling programs and
brilUanl guesl aOlsls Ihat New York
Slale has come to expect from the
RPO. The Music Festival program In·
cludes a conden devoted to BeethOven
and one dedicated to E.T : a weekend
of Russian Romanrll::S and a Sousa
Spec/acular; programs feat uring
Broadway claSSICS and programs
fealuring dassical Romantic com·
posers, and muCh more, The schedul·
ed guest al1lsts include 'he brightest
young per/onners in the current music
soene SUCh as conductor Christian
Badea. cellist Ofra Harnoy and
violinisls Mark Kaplan and Peler Zerof·
sky,
The Festival Will oJ11clally begIn on
July 16 will1 an All Beerhoven Openlflg
Night Gala, The program Will ap·
propr'iately begin with Beethoven 's
Consecration 01 ihe House Overture,
Maes tro David Zinman and the RPO
wllltilan be joined by Theodore Hollen.
bach and the Rochester Ora Iorio
Society lor Beelhoven's Symphony
No, 9 in 0 minor. Opus 125, "Choral"
So101.9ts lor the Opening NIgnl Gllia will
be soprano Jann Jafle. mezzo·soprano
Karen Brun ssen. tenor Darrel
Rowader and bass Kurt Link,
Pops conductor and harmonica vir·
tuosc Richard Hayman will continue
the opening weekend excitemenl on
July 17 with Pop-Oversl Hayman 's
guest appearances with Ihe RPO are
always concerts filled With unpredic·
table musical high jinx.
Tickets for the RPO concerts al 'he
, 983 Finger Lakes Music Feslival ara
priced as follows: $14 for individUal
seats In Ihe boxes. $a for inside seats.
$6 lor seating on the lawn. A specisl
boo~let of B coupons. ~nown as a
Grass Pass. will be available for $38.
TIcke1s will be available at the RPO Box
Olfice beginning May , 5. The RPO
Box Office is localed on 14 Gibbs
Street and may be reached by phone al
(716) 454·7091.
Writing Concentration Awards
From Alec Sutherland
Three Writing Concentration Seniors and a W"I Con alumna ha ..... placed high
in recent regional and slatewida competitions, So that lheir signal achievemenls
do not go generally unnoticed in our c urrent rush to Commencemenll would like
to share lI1elr victories wilh you,
Political Science malar Barb Hellenschmld1 has won ,he Judy Weis PolitJcal
Achl9llement Award. Nemed lor a Congresswoman who served 'hiS area In the
1940's Ihe Weis Award IS open to nominees lrom all Rochesler Area Colleges,
who compete on Ihe bas,s of their grades. their political records. recommenda­tions
and intervIews,
Lorraine Scherer has won Ihe Ralph P. Kepner MemOrial Aware! for Exoellence
in Student Technical Communication The Kepner Awards, establIshed by the
Rochester Chapter of the Society lor Technical Communication. are presenled
after an annual essay comp&tition open to nominations by all area colleges WIth
courses In lechnical wriring Lorraine's paper was wrillen on our English 35t in
Fs1l19B2, She Is the Ii 1"31 winnerota Kepner prize from a collegeothei than RITln
a dozen years,
Both current senior Kalhy Kehoe and 1981 graduate Gayle Hudak wnle lor
upstate newspapers and bOlh of tham !lave recently seen their work honored in
the 1 9B2 Setter Newspaper Contest sponsored by the New York State Press
ASSOCIation. An Issue of the Skaneateles Press conlaining several articles Kalhy
wrote during her internshIp Wllh Ille paper has won her third place for General Ex·
callen08, Gayle Hudak. once known as Ihe (unniest wriler a' Nazarelh. has won
third place (or Humor for hE!{ columns in Ihe Palmyra Couri",·Joumal,
Upcoming - Stage III Holiday Theater For Ticket
Information: MACK&MABEL
THE MUSICAL ROMANCE OF
MACK SENNBTT'S FUNNY AND FABULOUS HOLLYWOOD
MtUIt & Mabel is • glorious musical salutiDg Ihe e&rly day. of film and Ihe bittersweet
romanoe oC movie direclor Mack Sennett and screen star Mabel NOrrnaJld.
Mach & Mabel is early HoUywood, Charlie Chaplio., Pies in the Pace, BAthing Beaulies,
Gloria Swanson and K~y.'one Kops rolled into ODe fabulous stage musical.
Music and Lyrics by Jarry Hennan and Michael Stewart
famous fOT Hello, Dolly! and Mame
RESERVED SEATING-$8.00
AP~IL 22 through JUNE 18
Name ______________________ __
Address ______________________ Dare of Show _________________ Number of Tickets, _ ____________ at $8,00 per ticket $ _____ Tolal
Checks to: Siage II Holiday Theater
1 20 Main Street East
Rochester. New Yorl< 14604
Visa/Me Accepted
Box Office 325·3230
Thursday. Friday. Saturday. 8:00 p,m.
AnnOlln~ernenu
Physique Championship
The New York Wesl District of Ihe
Nedonal Physique Committee. U.S.A.
aod Stimson's Gym. 572 Lyell Avenue.
Rochester. has announced h will spon­sor
the 1983 Aochester/Westem New
York Physique Championships to be
held at Monroe High SChool. May 21.
7:00 pm.
Trophies will be awarded In four
basic categories: men. teenage.
women and novice. Judging will be
based on general appearance.
,.
~~
muscularity. symetl)! and muscle
dsfinition.
Rules and entl)! InlOm1aUon are
available by writillO 10 Mr. James
Rockell. 572 Lyell Avenue. Rochester.
N.Y .. 14606 or calling (716)
254-9475. The non-profit competllion
Is sanctioned by the Na~onal Physique
CommIttee of Ihe U.S.A. aod the
AmeriC8l1 Feceratlon of Women Body
Builders.
Let
Ralph Ford
transform
you! Stop in
at Ralph's
School of
Beauty '
Culture or
call ext. 225
today!
Congratulations
To All Nazareth
Graduates!
GOOD LUCK IN
THE FUTURE!
Siudent typing - papers $1 ,00 per
page, Resumes. manuscripts and
gene ral typing a too done. 381-0522
Man & Woman don't have any­where
to live. Want 10 know if
they could sublease apart­menVhouse
for the summer
from either studenVstaH. Sue
Urwin, 248-5232.
Earn $500 or more each
school year. Flexible hours.
Monthly payment. for placing
posters on campus. Bonus bas­ed
on results. Prizes awarded
as well. 800-526-0883.
uJC; .... IJo5r. ~~ ••••• ----.---J
uture Offerings At The
Vlargaret Woodbury
Strong Museum
SATURDAY, MAY 28 - Exhlbll Opening:
. 'Colleerlng: The Endless Ouesl ..
This exnlbit will deal wilh the concems 01 collectors-what
motivateS them. how people begin to collecl. anCi many of Ihe
types 01 objects which are considered colleclible. Selected items
from Margaret Woodbury Strong's lesser known collections will
be on display IncluCilng lrading cards. baseball cards. bunons.
soullElnlrs. spoons and stamps. Included in the exhlbil WIll be B
video-tape (caplloned lor Ihe hearing impairedJ of persona) Inter·
views wllh local collectors.
SATURDAY, MAY 28 - E.l<hlhlt Opening;
"Images in Blue; Flow BJue Potreryand Porcelain. J830-1914"
Flow Blue. ona 01 the mosl popular ceramic wares of the nine­teenlh
century. is characterized by a hal~like underglaze blue
decoration. This exhibit focuses on the reasons for lis popularity,
the history and types of design for Row Blue, and Ihe Oriental
origin and Western manulacturers of the ware. Represenled will
be sampfes from Ihe Strong Museum's extensive collection of
Flow 81ue, much 01 It donated to the Museum by Petra S ..
WIlliams. author of several bcoks on the subject. fncluded are
designs from Ihe Staffordshire ponery district In England. as well
as Flow 81ue made in Franoe. Holland. Sweden and Germany.
MAY, 198.3 - Book Published
The Light 01 Ihe Home: An Int/male View 01 Uves 01 Women in
Vidorian America by Harvey Green, Historian. Sirong Museum
An outgrowth of the exhibit' 'Llght of the Home' Middle Class
American Women. 1870·t 910". this bcok by Harvey Green of­fers
a look at an "unexamined and virtually importenl
mainstream of late nineteenth·century culture." Illustrated ex·
tensively with photogfllphs of lhe coJleCl1ons of Ihe Strong
Museum. Ihe bcok will be published by Pantheon Books In May.
198.3. Covered are topics relating 10 the lum-of·the-century
woman such as: courtship and marriage. motherhood and chIld
care. decorating the home. physical and menial well· being,
leisure hme, death. religion. and observalions on how this time
and these women Inftuenced the cultural and social hves of !Wen·
tieth century Americans.
CURAENTL'f ON EXHIBIT AT THE STRONG MUSEUM:
MAtN GALLERY
"711e Greal Transformation "
"The Greal Transformation" examines the growth 01 north­east
America from the isolated ianns, VIllages and cities 01 1820
to the urbanized. mechanized, induslriallzed society of the earty
1900s. The exhibit oilers an array of documentation about the
beginnings 01 industrialization and the development Of Ihe
American system 01 transportation and communication. Time
clocks. textiles. glass, ceramics, lilhographed ads. mall order
catalogs. end other items of mass product/on iIIuslrBte the story
of the Induslrial Revolulion in northeast America.
. 'Changing P'Imems: HousehoJd FurniShings. 1820· 1939"
This exhlbil focuses on the fonn and design of lIems with
which Americans chose to fumish their homes during the cen·
tury 01 industrlaltzation. "Changing Patterns" Is divided into
20-year blocks of tlme. each time frame lreating lhe conventional
suocesslon of styles that generally characterize the nineteenlh
oentury-Greek Revival. GothiC Revival. Renaissance Revival,
Colonial Revival. Art Nouveau. and Art Deco-wilh specially
selecled furnishings depleting each period.
SATURDAY, MA'f 28 - E.l<hlblt Opening:
"Innllr Adion: Automllia and Mechnicsl Toys, IB5/). 1950"
Over 140 dolls Bnd IOyS. represenling one hundred years 01
automala and mechanicsltoys Win be featured in the exhibition
"Inner Action: AUlomata and Mechanical Toys. 1850-1950".
Highlighting the exhibll will be the famous 'Writing Child" by
Henn Maellardel. on loan from the Franklin Institute in
Philadelphia.
Changing Gallery
Exhibit closes January, 1984
"'Llghl 01 Ihe Home: Middle Class AmeriClln Woman,
1870-'910"
"Ught ollhe Home" axhibWs the everyday IIle 01 the middle
class VIOmW1living in the northeastern Uniled States. Both myth
and the reallty, surroun(Jing women's lives are sttown. wilh
special elnphasi~ "Placed on marriage and motherhood. the
woman's role in managing ahome and family. and the outside in·
terests in which women became Involved. The exhibit a Iso shows
how women \Y3lned their children. Ihe physical care they gave
Ihem. and how the values of the middle class home were subtly
imposed by playthings.
HOURS:
The Museum Is ap,," Tuesday throUOh Saturday, 10:00 a.m.
10 5:00 p.m.: Sunday. 1 :00 10 5:00 p.m .. closed Monday.
Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.
ADMfSSION:
Current edmission rates are: adults. $2.00; children 4-16
years. $.75: students w~h a school ID. $1.50: senior clllzens.
$1.50
The Strong Museum is accessible 10 the handicapped.
For further information conlactthe public aI/airs department.
(7t 6)283·2700.
An afternoon
of Jazz Dance
The Hochstein Music School
will present An Aftemoon Of
Jan Oance Saturday, May 14 at
2:00 p.m. at Hochstein, 50
North Plymouth Avenue,
Downtown.
The pertormances will feature
Hochstein's Jazz Dance
Classes (both children and adult
beginning and intermediate);
Wendy Bierman, Jazz Dance
Instructor at Hochstein; and
members of the Hochstein Jazz
Ensemble.
The Concert is FREE and
open to the public!
ATTH~E RP
o H
C IL
H H
E A
S ~
T 0
E N
R Ie
Last night the Board 01
Directors of the Rochester
Philharmonic Orchestra
unanimously approved a
tripartite agreement naming
the RPO as managers of tha
Finger Lakes Performing Arts
Centar. This contnlct WIIS ap­proved
by the 80ard 01
Trustees 01 the Community
College 01 the FInger Lakes on
Monday. April 251h and'wlll be
on the agenda of the Ontarto
County Board of Supervisor's
meeting on Thrusday. April
26th. .
Paul Pageney. President of
the RPO Board 01 Directors.
commented. "Aller discussion
by the RPO Board members,
the three parties 10 the oon­tract
were congratulated on
preparing a documelll-Whiclils
fair to'a11 patties. We·'1l113 lOOk· ,
ing toMard to'a-COnlln'O'a!lon 01
the past cordiet workl ng rela­tionship
between the RPO and
the oollege personnel. This
summer will be an exciting one
lor uS all."'
The Grand Opening 01 the
RPO's summer season and
the Finger u,kes Performing
Arts Cellter is scheduled lor
Salurday. July 16th. The
Grand Opening weekend In·
dudes a Salurday avening All
Bee/hoven Concen with RPO
Music Direclor. David Zinman
conducting the RPO and the
Rochesler Ortorlo Society .
Pops cond uctor Richard
Hayman will lead the RPO on
Sunday ellElning lor an evening
01 .. Pop.{)vers" .
HoUl Do You Spell ...
GARFIELD®
by Jim Davis
600D /llDRNIN6.LITIlE GIRL ..
,<ou SURE ARE A CUTE
UTilE nUNS .•. I SEE 'feu
!.\AVE A SEl"UmY 6l.ANKET ..
WOULD ,<ou LIKE TO
!{AVE ME TELL 'YOU HOW
r BROKE MYSELF 01"
THAT J.lABIT?
GREAT
EXPECTATIONS
by
Duncan
STUPID KID!!!
PEANUTS® by
Charles Schultz
Lea\'e "our
Name al Ille lnd
Olille Message
You never know who's on the other end of a Gleaner.
A lady in Long Island got a copy and read Marc
laVecchia's column once. He now has 50,000 readers.
The G/eCiner has a never ending demand for writers. This
could be your chance to be discovered.
Discover gold: training as an advertising representative I
(with a chance for advancement to advertising manager 1
next year). Stop in at The Gleaner and leave your name at I
the end of the message. j
~
t
~ ~ __________________________________________________________________ ~ i

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VOL. 58 NO. 22 0 MAY 6, 1983
Nelson Named New Coach
Nazareth Public Relations Release
8ill Nelson. mBn·s varsity baSlletball
coach at Rochester Institute of
Technology. has been named men·s
\/arslty basketball coach at Nazarelh
College. Nazareth Athlellc Director 8111
Carey announced Ihe appointmsntto·
day (April 25),
Carsy also announced that Jim
Emery. Jr .. has been retained as assis­IDnl
men's I18rsity basketball coach.
Emery will coach the junior varsity
teem in addition to hiS dulles with Ihe
varsity.
The 39·year·old Nelson was named
Independent College Athletic Con.
ference Coach of the Year last winter
aher guiding RIT to its firsl ICAC hlle -
trying IIhaca with a I ()'2 league mark.
Ithaca edged ths Tlg al s by 8 single
point In a playoff to gain the ICAC·s
automaUc bid to NCAA post·seasons
loruney play, RIT was 15·11 overall
last year and 4()'36 during Nelson·s
three seasons as head coach. His
198 t -82 team won the Lincoln First
Bank Tournament. '
·'We are very fortvnate 10 have a
-coach wilh the Quality and experience
that Bill nelson has Joining our SIDH. "
Carey said. ··He is a proven winner and
will do much to continue building the
tradition of excellence the Nazareth
basketball program has enjoyed in its
iniiial years.·'
··We are also very pleased to have
Jim Emery rem~l!l as part 01 our
leam." Carey added. '·Jlm is an ex·
lremely dedicated, hardworking coach
who hes done en outstanding job tor us
during the past year."
Net son succeeds John Betleln. who
resigned at Nazarelh three weeks ago
10 move to leMoyne, Nazareth posled
Frank Horton
a 20-6 record - Its most wins In a
single season - dunng Belleln's tone
season as head coach.
Nelson will also coach
men's-womsn's CrOSS country and
teach physical education classes al
Nazarelh.
He has been a part Of Ihe RIT basket·
ball program lor the past 15 years.
Before becoming head coach, Nelson
served for 12 years as assislant coach
under Sill Carey. who was Ril's head
coach until he came 10 Nazareth In
, 980, Nelson also coached soccer al
RIT for eight years befors laking over
the head baske-tball pOst.
Nalson coached at Griffiths Instirutes
In Springville end at Bishop Kearney
High School before jOining RIT.
He played basketball for Greace
Olympia High School and Brockport,
serving as a tean;> captain at both his
high school and college teams,
Nelson holds a bachelor·s degree in
physical education from Brockport and
a mestsr's degree In physical educa·
tion from the Unlvers'ty of Oregon.
Nelson and his wife Margaret are
parents ot a 4 and a hall·year·otd
daughter. Laura BrOOke,
The 25·year-old Emery served as an
assistant ooach at Nazarelh under
Beilein las! wimer. Belore coming to
Nazareth. Emery was assistant basket·
ball coach at Alfred University lor fwo
years and s",lie, served l ilree years on
Ihe llhaca College basketball coaching
slaff. ,
Emery holds a bachelor's degree on
phySical education flom Ithaca Col·
lege. His wile. M~ry Ann, Is associate
direclor of residenhallife at Nazarelh.
Pentagon Purchasing: Less For Your $ $
Washington-Whst would you think of
someone who purchases an Item lor
$2.000 at one slore. which he could
have purcl1ased al a store across Ihe
street for only $6477 Not very sensible
woufd be an understatement.
Nonetheless, this IS precisely whaltho
Defense Department IS actually doing
in ils procurement 01 some $t 3 billion
worth of spare pans used 10 keep our
mifitary machines working.
The above is but one among hun·
dreds of examples brought to myalten·
Mn during a recent hearing before my
Govemment Operahon Committee on
Oepartment of Defense procurement
practices.
The roosan for this problem Is slm·
pie: Defense does not insist Ihal con·
tractors compete with each other for
military spare parts business, This fact
was subslanliated by belh the General
Accounting OHice and the Acting In­spector
General for the Oepartmenl 01
Defense.
Existing practice is to accept prime
contractors as the " whole source" lor
items manufactured under subcon­tract.
The result is that taxpayers end
up paying for bolh Ihe subconlracted
pan and markups imposed by the
prime contractor. These mar1 more eHectivly II Ihey got down
oH their big white horses a~d com·
municated with the studenls on a Dna
to one. Get 10 know Ihe 31udenlB: you
already know how to e)(plOit them. Of·
fer oounoelling lor Ihose who need it.
act like you care for 8 change. t don't
Ihlnk I 'm wrong. il you daub! me look at
Ihe " on campus" enrollment figures
fOI next year. Good Job guys. Nobody
wanls 10 hve On campus anymore,
wonder why? II you think il's because
of nalionwide enrollment decreases,
Iryagain: theU 01 Rand RIT can't build
their student housing lasl enough to
Bcoomodate the demand.
Signed
Sa~dy Becker' ·N·14"
Student response to Bellinger
and Grinstead leiters ...
Dear Mr. Edi!or.
Over the past two and three weekS. I
have seen many ludicrous and
premalure responses 10 Ihe Gleaner's
allemp!lo inform Ihe students 01 exact·
Iy what is and has been going on within
Ihe sludenl (for Ihe lack of a bet1er
word) govemment. !!hink il Is lime Ihal
an oUlsider, if I may be so bOld, said a
word or two.
Firsl. I would like to addrnss Mr. Beli·
Inger's lel1er. Wait. He and I are
friends. He won'! mind if I call him
" Sam". I can not beliave Ihat you said
that the Gleaner was aUotted $1 I ,000
Ihls year. ,Iue, it was given additional
fundS Ihree·quarters 01 the way
Ihrough this school year and, true. II
does add up 10 appro)(Jmately that
ligure. Bul If t am not wrong, Ihe
newspapel waS originally allolted only
$8500 for this year. After I spenl hall
........· •A••••- ~ ....... .
: (Campus Paperback Bestsellers} :
• I. The n",m Blnls, by Coleen Me Cullough. lAvon. $3.95.) •
• HlSlorical AUSlrnlian ramlly saga. •
• 2. War and Remombranc&. by Herman Wouk (Pocke' $5.95.1 •
• ConlinulnQ 'Me slory began in "The Wind, 01 War". •
• 3. The Persl,., MOS-'Ic, by Roben Ludlum (Ba~I.m. S4 SO.) •
Sptes and oounter!p~e:s race \0 prevent World \'I/a, m.
• 4. The Wind. 01 War, by Herman Wouk IPoc~.1. S4 95.) •
• One family' srruggle 10 .urviva dUM9 World W;,r II •
• 5. Garfield his hIs Heart Ou~ by Jim Oov, .. (Ballanll~a. •
• S.4.95.) More humor With Ameriea'9 favorilB c.anoon caf •
• 6. 5<>phle'. Choice, by William Slyron. (B.nlam. S3.95) Tlw •
• nalUre 01 eVil seen \i'lrough Ihe lives of two doomed rov~rs_ •
• 7. Olnner.t the Homeslcl< R ... l.auranL by AM Tyl." . (B.",'ey. •
• >3.50.) Three ch lldr.n Ulu9hl 'n 1M I~e" parenf. P831. •
• 8. When Bed Things Heppe" to Good People, by Harold
Kushner (Avon. >3.50.) c orn ron/ng Ihough" lrom a rabbI. •
•
• 9. lOWl, by leo 8U'C4QIIa. (Fawctlt. 53.50 ) InsDor.llon ••
'rom a Sourhern california proteSSI.:J,
• 11), Uvlng, loving and Leamlng, by Le-o BU$l peT>Onn.1 ,hono9"',
Thousand. of opening> need 10 be filled
n"'" All ~~ons. In the U.S and ove""""
Disc""..,.. opportu niMs Ihal ~ I you .
conte! c t Intercris1.o!
You'U receive a curreTll Itsl of openings
thaI require your skills and .''P''li''''c •.
God', IOOrk needs you,
Contact tnlercri5to today:
1(800)426-1342
(Alaska, Hawalt, Washtngton S1ate.
(206) 546-1330),
Or re:lurn the COUpOn l>e/o,,",
I-~-------------' m Intercrl810 CC:
, • The Christian I
~ ea"",r Sp.zdali' In·
ches and Fathead Minnows for warm
water ponds" will be available. The
Rainbow Trout will be delivered May 2,
1983, at 10:00 and the Largemoulh
Bass and Fathead Minnows will be
delivered sometime In July, All
necessa ry forms for transportl ng and
stocking fish will be supplied with the
order torms. So, don't dalay, call our
office at473-2120 If you want to order
fish for stocking your ponds this year.
And more
Letters to
the ·Editor ...
Dear Ted,
Kudos for the greal Job you're doing
with Tile Gleaner,
Dear Gleaner Editor
(That's you, Ted),
Francesca Gull
How about putting one of your ace
reporters on the mystery of what has
happened to our Saturday mall
delivery? Ooce and for all, why are we
being deprived of il only because we
happen to live on Inslead of off cam­pus.
It's especially frustrating 10 Ihose
of us who arli expecting Important mail,
Why Is Ihls semester so different from
last semester when we did gel a Satur­day
mail delivery? It can '\ possibly be a
shortage Of help-I've talked to too
many of my fellow students who are not
working and would be more Ihan will·
ing to do anything to earn exira cash.
So, come on and give us back our mail
on Salurday.
A Resident
Feature
Acid Rain
A Serious Environmental Hazard
by Christine Pe11'I
Everyone knows thet ecid raln Is a
erlous worldwide enviromental
azard. especially In Ihe Adirondacks.
IUt whare does il oeme lrom? Who Is
eing effected by It? And how can it be
,revented?
The problem stems from vast Quan·
lies of coal. oil. and natural gas bel ng
'umed. Electrical generating plants.
ldustrial boilers. and smellers release
1to the air suiter dioxide and nKragen
O(ldes. the main contrlbutors to acid
aln. The United States alone
lischa~es 26 million tons of these
:ompounds a year. and Indiana. II­nois,
and Ohio are responsible for
Nenty-five percent of this amoun\.
There Is new evidsn08 that the emls·
,Ions Of automobiles Is another con·
ribuling faClor since many of the
Idirondack lakes affected are located
lear heavHy trafficked rOO05,
As the sulfer dioxide and
Iitrogenous oxides are released. they
iss into the atmosphere and begin to
:irculate with the moving air masses,
'!lese cherni08ls then Inlsract with the
:un. water. oxtdants, and other
:atalysts and change into Other forms
If sulfer and nitrogen: the forms pre­;
enl in acid precipiratlon.
Eventually Ihese chemicals are
:aughl in raJn droplets or snowflakes;
;Q In effect they are dilute solutions 01
'itrlc and sulfuric acid. The other way
hey exisl Is as dry particles and the
Irst rain or snowfall transforms them
nlo acid droplets,
Ons often hears about the add rain
lroblem in the AdlrondllCks. but this
lroblem exists in other portions of the
)nlled States. IISwsll asln Canada and
larts of Europe. Cities ara affected as
Nell as toresls, For example bridges.
1l8tues, monuments. and tombstones
are being decayed by Ihls preclpita·
tlon. Both Ihe U.S. Capitol and the
Statue at Ubeny ate famous examples
)f this.
Woodland and monuments aren't
!he only l/llngs affecled by acid raln:
:he health of the people Is at stake. The
1ry suWates are now being associated
Nith chronic bronchitis. asthma. and
lmphysema, In addition high odd con­enlS
in the waler aupply draws lead
Ind copper tram the piping and Into Ihe
lrlnklng water.
However. Ihe Adirondacks are very
;usceptible to add rain because the
nounl81nous region receives a lot of
lrecipllation and Ihe soli and bedrock
lte relarively thin. So the pH level
lound in the bedrock In whiCh the lakes
are formed I s not h Ig h enough to
neutralize this acid precipitation.
In the Adirondacks alone. 212 lakes
can no IOllller $upjJOrt fish life. AI a pH
level 016.5 (slighlly acidic) populations
of brook, brown. and rainbow Irout are
red ueed. As the addKy InCfease5 to a
pH of 5.5 lorge and smallmoulh bass
are eliminated and lhe trout and
salmon populations are further reduc·
ed. And finally at a pH of 5.0 taw fi6h
can survive at all.
In certain areas of the Adirondacks
fox. deer. rabbit. bobcaL racoon, and
porcupine populations are down
because of Ihe food Chain Interference
due to the acid precipitation. In addi·
«on. a New York State Forest Ranger
on Big Moose Lake notes that the loon
hes en~rely disappeared from the area.
Also. because of the high acidity.
bacteria and fungus that normally
cau sa decay a ra Inh ibited. Therefore
leaves that fall into acid lekes stay
there and eventually cause Ihese lakes
to fill in.
At present. the Cloon Air Act requires
each Industrial plant to control itS own
emissions. So In Ohio. a state with
looser regulations. the emissions are'
thirty ~mes greater than In "dean plant
states" such as Connecticut and other
New England States. This Act forces
slales thai do control their Industrial
output to stili suffer because ot the lax·
ness 8 nd recklessness 01 others.
In order to combat tile existing acid
In the lakes, lime or soda esh ere being
used to neutralize the water. Also,
strains of acid resistanl brook trout are
being d9118lopecf so tIlal the lakes will
again be fishable,
The acid precipItation problem will
continue 10 increase unless we ca Ie
e/lOugh to do something about h: such
as supPOning legls~tlon that will
reduce the emi ssion of lhasa lox Ins.
After all. who wants to see our
historical monuments crumbling
before our eyes. or walk Into a lifeless.
silent forest because its Inhabitants
have been driven away or killed
by ... ACIO RAIN.-?1<
····oORc~ G ~VLl S\
..... \it"' "'-~ ••.•
'J~ G ~!.=.".
~ .. "
Finger Lakes Music Festival
The 1983 Finger Lakes Music
Festival will mark the Rochester
Phllharmonic's seventh summer in
cana ndaigua and tt1e G ra nd 0 pening
ollhe long-awalred Finger Lakes Per·
forming Al1s Cenler, The perfo r·
mances of the 19B3 Finger Lakes
Music Festival will begin on July 16
and conlinue IhrQugh August 2B.
Rochester Philharmonic concerts
will be presented on Saturday and Sun.
day evenings at the Finger Lakes Per·
forminD Arts Cenler. which is located
on the campus of Ihe Community Col·
lege of me Finger Lakes. Saturday
evenings will soar wllh exhilirating
classical programs. while Sunday
evenings will sparkle with a variety of
festive pops conCBrts. All perfor­mances
begin al 7:30 p.m,
The Finger Lakes MUSiC FesliV81 0('
fers the sort of exciling programs and
brilUanl guesl aOlsls Ihat New York
Slale has come to expect from the
RPO. The Music Festival program In·
cludes a conden devoted to BeethOven
and one dedicated to E.T : a weekend
of Russian Romanrll::S and a Sousa
Spec/acular; programs feat uring
Broadway claSSICS and programs
fealuring dassical Romantic com·
posers, and muCh more, The schedul·
ed guest al1lsts include 'he brightest
young per/onners in the current music
soene SUCh as conductor Christian
Badea. cellist Ofra Harnoy and
violinisls Mark Kaplan and Peler Zerof·
sky,
The Festival Will oJ11clally begIn on
July 16 will1 an All Beerhoven Openlflg
Night Gala, The program Will ap·
propr'iately begin with Beethoven 's
Consecration 01 ihe House Overture,
Maes tro David Zinman and the RPO
wllltilan be joined by Theodore Hollen.
bach and the Rochester Ora Iorio
Society lor Beelhoven's Symphony
No, 9 in 0 minor. Opus 125, "Choral"
So101.9ts lor the Opening NIgnl Gllia will
be soprano Jann Jafle. mezzo·soprano
Karen Brun ssen. tenor Darrel
Rowader and bass Kurt Link,
Pops conductor and harmonica vir·
tuosc Richard Hayman will continue
the opening weekend excitemenl on
July 17 with Pop-Oversl Hayman 's
guest appearances with Ihe RPO are
always concerts filled With unpredic·
table musical high jinx.
Tickets for the RPO concerts al 'he
, 983 Finger Lakes Music Feslival ara
priced as follows: $14 for individUal
seats In Ihe boxes. $a for inside seats.
$6 lor seating on the lawn. A specisl
boo~let of B coupons. ~nown as a
Grass Pass. will be available for $38.
TIcke1s will be available at the RPO Box
Olfice beginning May , 5. The RPO
Box Office is localed on 14 Gibbs
Street and may be reached by phone al
(716) 454·7091.
Writing Concentration Awards
From Alec Sutherland
Three Writing Concentration Seniors and a W"I Con alumna ha ..... placed high
in recent regional and slatewida competitions, So that lheir signal achievemenls
do not go generally unnoticed in our c urrent rush to Commencemenll would like
to share lI1elr victories wilh you,
Political Science malar Barb Hellenschmld1 has won ,he Judy Weis PolitJcal
Achl9llement Award. Nemed lor a Congresswoman who served 'hiS area In the
1940's Ihe Weis Award IS open to nominees lrom all Rochesler Area Colleges,
who compete on Ihe bas,s of their grades. their political records. recommenda­tions
and intervIews,
Lorraine Scherer has won Ihe Ralph P. Kepner MemOrial Aware! for Exoellence
in Student Technical Communication The Kepner Awards, establIshed by the
Rochester Chapter of the Society lor Technical Communication. are presenled
after an annual essay comp&tition open to nominations by all area colleges WIth
courses In lechnical wriring Lorraine's paper was wrillen on our English 35t in
Fs1l19B2, She Is the Ii 1"31 winnerota Kepner prize from a collegeothei than RITln
a dozen years,
Both current senior Kalhy Kehoe and 1981 graduate Gayle Hudak wnle lor
upstate newspapers and bOlh of tham !lave recently seen their work honored in
the 1 9B2 Setter Newspaper Contest sponsored by the New York State Press
ASSOCIation. An Issue of the Skaneateles Press conlaining several articles Kalhy
wrote during her internshIp Wllh Ille paper has won her third place for General Ex·
callen08, Gayle Hudak. once known as Ihe (unniest wriler a' Nazarelh. has won
third place (or Humor for hE!{ columns in Ihe Palmyra Couri",·Joumal,
Upcoming - Stage III Holiday Theater For Ticket
Information: MACK&MABEL
THE MUSICAL ROMANCE OF
MACK SENNBTT'S FUNNY AND FABULOUS HOLLYWOOD
MtUIt & Mabel is • glorious musical salutiDg Ihe e&rly day. of film and Ihe bittersweet
romanoe oC movie direclor Mack Sennett and screen star Mabel NOrrnaJld.
Mach & Mabel is early HoUywood, Charlie Chaplio., Pies in the Pace, BAthing Beaulies,
Gloria Swanson and K~y.'one Kops rolled into ODe fabulous stage musical.
Music and Lyrics by Jarry Hennan and Michael Stewart
famous fOT Hello, Dolly! and Mame
RESERVED SEATING-$8.00
AP~IL 22 through JUNE 18
Name ______________________ __
Address ______________________ Dare of Show _________________ Number of Tickets, _ ____________ at $8,00 per ticket $ _____ Tolal
Checks to: Siage II Holiday Theater
1 20 Main Street East
Rochester. New Yorl< 14604
Visa/Me Accepted
Box Office 325·3230
Thursday. Friday. Saturday. 8:00 p,m.
AnnOlln~ernenu
Physique Championship
The New York Wesl District of Ihe
Nedonal Physique Committee. U.S.A.
aod Stimson's Gym. 572 Lyell Avenue.
Rochester. has announced h will spon­sor
the 1983 Aochester/Westem New
York Physique Championships to be
held at Monroe High SChool. May 21.
7:00 pm.
Trophies will be awarded In four
basic categories: men. teenage.
women and novice. Judging will be
based on general appearance.
,.
~~
muscularity. symetl)! and muscle
dsfinition.
Rules and entl)! InlOm1aUon are
available by writillO 10 Mr. James
Rockell. 572 Lyell Avenue. Rochester.
N.Y .. 14606 or calling (716)
254-9475. The non-profit competllion
Is sanctioned by the Na~onal Physique
CommIttee of Ihe U.S.A. aod the
AmeriC8l1 Feceratlon of Women Body
Builders.
Let
Ralph Ford
transform
you! Stop in
at Ralph's
School of
Beauty '
Culture or
call ext. 225
today!
Congratulations
To All Nazareth
Graduates!
GOOD LUCK IN
THE FUTURE!
Siudent typing - papers $1 ,00 per
page, Resumes. manuscripts and
gene ral typing a too done. 381-0522
Man & Woman don't have any­where
to live. Want 10 know if
they could sublease apart­menVhouse
for the summer
from either studenVstaH. Sue
Urwin, 248-5232.
Earn $500 or more each
school year. Flexible hours.
Monthly payment. for placing
posters on campus. Bonus bas­ed
on results. Prizes awarded
as well. 800-526-0883.
uJC; .... IJo5r. ~~ ••••• ----.---J
uture Offerings At The
Vlargaret Woodbury
Strong Museum
SATURDAY, MAY 28 - Exhlbll Opening:
. 'Colleerlng: The Endless Ouesl ..
This exnlbit will deal wilh the concems 01 collectors-what
motivateS them. how people begin to collecl. anCi many of Ihe
types 01 objects which are considered colleclible. Selected items
from Margaret Woodbury Strong's lesser known collections will
be on display IncluCilng lrading cards. baseball cards. bunons.
soullElnlrs. spoons and stamps. Included in the exhlbil WIll be B
video-tape (caplloned lor Ihe hearing impairedJ of persona) Inter·
views wllh local collectors.
SATURDAY, MAY 28 - E.l